In a representative democracy it’s not democracy’s purpose to produce good government but to produce representative government. While I don’t expect much in the way of democracy from representative democracy1 enough New Zealanders voted against their interests on Saturday to elect into government a multimillionaire merchant banker Prime Minister and his self-interested fat cat accomplices, including some of those who wreaked havoc on the New Zealand economy in the eighties and nineties. As a result New Zealanders can expect, amongst other things, a nastier society, a less fair society, more crime, more prisons, lower wages, more involvement in futile and immoral wars, a decline in the environment and less democracy. Garbage in, garbage out.2
As you can tell, I’m over the moon that enough New Zealanders had, shall we say, the confidence to vote National (and ACT!) on Saturday. They must have missed my memo.
Notes:- New Zealand’s current voting system requires the formation of a coalition representing a majority of voters to form a government. While this is something to be relatively proud of compared to the more common system of plurality voting, which requires only that a group receive the largest bloc of votes to form a government, we still end up with an extremely limited form of democracy.
While there are things we could do to improve our voting system, such as moving away from having two large parties and getting rid of the absurd 5% threshold which can disenfrachise hundreds of thousands of voters, there’s no getting away from the inherent problems of representative democracy, such as the tyranny of simple majority rules (let alone plurality rules) and the fact that voting for people to represent your interests is the least effective means of applying political power and arguably a contradiction; no one can truly represent your power and interests for you. You can only have power by exercising it and you can only truly know what your interests are by involving yourself in the attendance of them.
In any case, I don’t think it’s any coincidence that the self-described democracies of the world using plurality voting systems are some of the least equitable, the largest arms dealers and the largest polluters. [↩]
- A famous computer axiom meaning that if invalid data is entered into a system, the resulting output will also be invalid. [↩]